Skip to main content
Menu
TVO logo
Search
Donate Now
  • Current Affairs
  • Documentaries
  • Programs
  • TVOkids
  • Education
  • TV Schedule
  • About TVO
  • Support Us
View Transcript
China: Here and Now

China: Here and Now

Beijing Billionaires: Host Intro

China: Here and Now host, Diana Fu, introduces the documentary, Beijing Billionaires.
See more from China: Here and Now, TVO’s documentary series about how 21st-century China is changing the world.
Aired: 
Nov 07, 2018
Comment

Share

  • Share on Facebook
  • Tweet
  • Email This

More Documentaries

  • 1:44
    Only Me Generation and China's 3 Dreams: Host Intros
    China: Here and Now
  • 1:42
    The New Silk Road Part 3 & 4: Host Intros
    China: Here and Now
  • 52:12
    China's 3 Dreams
  • 58:27
    Only Me Generation
  • 5:38
    Battling Dementia Through the Power of AI
    Ontario Hubs
  • 1:05:41
    Question Period: Thursday, December 20, 2018
    Question Period
  • 47:02
    Beijing Billionaires
  • 1:13:41
    Dream Empire
  • 55:15
    White Right: Meeting the Enemy

Get Current Affairs & Documentaries email updates in your inbox every morning.

  • Subscribe

Documentaries

  • My Millennial Life
    54:23 - Feb 16, 2019
    A look through the eyes of a group of 20-somethings at the obstacles they face in making their mark on the world.
  • Beyond the Spectrum
    57:39 - Feb 16, 2019
    Two-year-old Oskar is diagnosed with severe autism. His parents decide to drop everything for a year to focus on his therapy.
  • Ep. 2 - Foraging
    Jimmy's Australian Food Adventure
    40:58 - Feb 16, 2019
    Jimmy Doherty forages for wild plants at Uluru and tries his hand at mud crabbing in the wilderness of Western Australia's Cape Leveque.
  • Ep. 4 - Auckland
    Coast New Zealand
    43:51 - Feb 15, 2019
    New Zealand's largest city is also the country's most coastal city, and most Aucklanders live within five kilometres of the sea.
  • Unsung: Behind the Glee
    53:17 - Feb 15, 2019
    Two rival Toronto high school glee clubs gear up for a musical showdown at the annual Show Choir Canada national championship.
  • Some Sort of Judas
    58:12 - Feb 15, 2019
    Ostracized for breaking a code of silence and testifying against a friend, Kevin Williams is released from prison into an uncertain future.
  • Ep. 1 - A Dangerous World
    Wild Brazil
    52:42 - Feb 15, 2019
    Three animal families - capuchin monkeys, giant otters and coatis - strive to raise their young against a backdrop of extraordinary landscapes and extremes of weather.
  • Ep. 3 - Moral Mission
    Africa and Britain: A Forgotten History
    50:51 - Feb 15, 2019
    Historian David Olusoga explores the Victorian moral crusade against slavery.
  • City Wildlife Rescue - Episode 7
    City Wildlife Rescue
    24:00 - Feb 15, 2019
    A baby raccoon is separated from his family and the rehabilitation team want to get him fixed up and back to the wild before his family moves on.

May we have a moment of your time?

Our public funding only covers some of the cost of producing high-quality, balanced content. We depend on the generosity of people who believe we all should have access to accurate, fair journalism. Caring people just like you!

Donate Now

The Agenda with Steve Paikin

  • The Agenda's Week in Review
    28:01 - Feb 15, 2019
    The Agenda reviews its week of programming.
  • Ontario Hubs: A Dispatch of Love and Politics
    8:35 - Feb 15, 2019
    Northeastern Hubs reporter Claude Sharma discusses PM Justin Trudeau's visit to Subbury this week.
  • Stanley Grizzle: Civil Rights Pioneer
    17:31 - Feb 15, 2019
    Canadian author Cecil Foster joins The Agenda to discuss his book, "They Call Me George: The Untold Story of Black Train Porters and the Birth of Modern Canada."
  • Where's the Love in Elected Politics?
    31:31 - Feb 14, 2019
    The Agenda discusses how politicians to work to overcome some of their differences.
  • Populism and the Future of White Majorities
    29:59 - Feb 14, 2019
    The Agenda welcomes author Eric Kaufmann to discuss his book, "White Shift:Populism, Immigration and the Future of White Majorities."
  • The Future of Senior Care
    22:14 - Feb 13, 2019
    The Agenda discusses how well Canada is supporting its older citizens to make the most of their later years.
  • The World's Shrinking Problem
    32:14 - Feb 13, 2019
    Authors John Ibbitson and Darrel Bricker discuss their new book, "Empty Plant: The Shock of Global Populatation Decline."
  • Cutting Back on Meat
    19:24 - Feb 12, 2019
    The Agenda welcomes Sylvain Charlebois to discuss a recent report that shows Canadians are not eating meat to the extent they used to.
  • Rethinking Canada's Food System
    34:49 - Feb 12, 2019
    The Agenda discusses Canada's complex food system and whether a national approach is needed.

Current Affairs

  • Edmund Metatawabin receiving the Order of Canada from Julie Payette
    What it means to be honoured by the country that wronged you
    Published On: Feb 15, 2019

    For his advocacy on behalf of residential-school survivors, Edmund Metatawabin was awarded the Order of Canada. He spoke with TVO about what the honour represents to him — and what the future holds for Indigenous communities.

  • photo of Toronto skyline showing construction cranes
    A radical plan for making homes more affordable: Sell cheaper homes
    Published On: Feb 15, 2019

    OPINION: A new report offers some bold suggestions for combatting Toronto’s housing-affordability problem, writes John Michael McGrath. So how much do you care about parking, pools, and rec rooms?

  • an archival photo of a train porter
    Excerpt: Cecil Foster's 'They Call Me George: The Untold Story of Black Train Porters and the Birth of Modern Canada'
    Published On: Feb 15, 2019

    For years, cross-country rail travel was an integral part of Canadian identity, and Black train porters played a central role. But despite their contributions, they were treated like second-class citizens.

  • Harriet Tubman
    Why Harriet Tubman made St. Catharines her home
    Published On: Feb 14, 2019

    For most of the decade prior to the Civil War, the American abolitionist made southern Ontario her home base — and helped other escaped slaves do the same.

  • a man holding a sword
    Lessons in love from Sudbury’s very own love doctor
    Published On: Feb 14, 2019

    This Valentine’s Day, TVO.org talks to Professor Jason Lepojärvi — better known as “Dr. Love” — about romance, friendship, and why it’s better to be in Finland on February 14.

  • speech bubble
    Bonus Episode - And The Oscar For Best Documentary Goes To...
    Published On: Feb 14, 2019

    Colin Ellis discuss this year’s crop of nominees with producers Chantal Braganza and Matt O'Mara.

  • gardening
    How Indigenous land-based learning can help fight climate change
    Published On: Feb 13, 2019

    Ontario university students are doing hands-on work in food and medicine gardens and in manomin fields — all part of a community-based research program aimed at cultivating healthy relationships and a healthy environment.

  • a person standing on a snowy street
    How Saint-Firmin Monestime made history as Canada’s first Black mayor
    Published On: Feb 13, 2019

    Political strife in Haiti brought him to Canada. A chance encounter in a restaurant brought him to the northeastern town of Mattawa — and a life in politics.

  • a doctor checking a baby
    The uncertain future of midwifery in Ontario
    Published On: Feb 12, 2019

    ANALYSIS: Twenty-five years after it became a regulated profession in the province, midwifery is at a crossroads. Chantal Braganza looks at the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead.

Ontario Hubs - Eastern

  • a person brushing their teeth
    Why health-care facilities need to brush up on seniors’ oral health
    Published On: Feb 07, 2019

    More elderly Ontarians are entering hospitals and long-term care-homes with their own teeth and need focused oral care — but facilities may not be equipped to provide it.

  • a building that houses a community radio station in eastern Ontario
    The spirit of (local) radio: How one tiny Ontario station keeps listeners tuning in
    Published On: Feb 01, 2019

    At Amherst Island’s CJAI 92.1 FM, volunteers host shows, work the mixing board, and woo advertisers — it’s just one of many small local radio stations across the province trying to do more with less.

  • three people sitting on the floor looking at photos
    Why these Syrian refugees in Ontario are still waiting to reunite with their family
    Published On: Jan 04, 2019

    In 2015, Abdel Malek Al-Jasem arrived here with his wife and children. But three years and countless application forms later, his brothers are still in Lebanon. What will it take to bring them to Canada?

  • Kingston city hall and surrounds
    Four things Kingston can teach other cities about climate-change plans
    Published On: Dec 14, 2018

    The city's strategy is number one in the country, according to a new study. So what is Kingston's secret?

  • a film title that says: Carry On Sergeant
    Lights, camera, Trenton: How a small Ontario town became Hollywood North
    Published On: Dec 03, 2018

    From 1917 to 1934, the Trenton Film Plant made more than 1,500 silent films. We talked to local historian Peggy Dymond Leavey about the studio’s heyday — and its biggest box-office bomb.

  • a truck parked at a fire station in Deep River, Ontario
    Why one Ontario town has been battling its own fire department
    Published On: Nov 30, 2018

    Deep River has, per capita, the most expensive fire department in Ontario — it’s hoping that new legislation will allow it to cut costs without putting residents at risk.

  • a doctor in a hospital room
    How one rural hospital is dealing with its funding crunch
    Published On: Nov 05, 2018

    In Ontario, the province funds operating costs but not equipment. So when Perth and Smiths Falls District Hospital came up against a funding shortage, they started asking neighbouring towns for help.

  • late night bus in Belleville
    What happens when ride sharing meets public transit?
    Published On: Oct 17, 2018

    Late-night commuters in Belleville now have a new transit option: their very own bus on demand. We go there to find out how it works.

  • a skull of a dinosaur
    Meet the dinosaur that’s being uncovered in Trenton
    Published On: Oct 15, 2018

    Thanks to one Ontario company, the recently discovered Zuul crurivastator is seeing the light of day for the first time in 75 million years.

Ontario Hubs - Northwestern

  • a person talking in a crowd
    Reports on racism and a reckoning for Thunder Bay
    Published On: Jan 17, 2019

    EXPLAINER: Two recent reports have identified systemic racism in the Thunder Bay Police Service. Here’s a look at the background, the situation as it stands, and where the city goes from here.

  • [INSERT ALT TEXT]
    Why Thunder Bay expats are coming home
    Published On: Jan 10, 2019

    For years, young people have been leaving for school and work. But the city’s employment landscape is changing — and former residents are heading back to be a part of it.

  • a rural CIBC branch
    What banking deserts mean for some of northern Ontario’s most vulnerable residents
    Published On: Jan 03, 2019

    Banks in the north are closing, and online services aren’t a solution for everyone. So what options remain for the “financially excluded”?

  • Basic Income Burden
    The Agenda with Steve Paikin
    7:26 - Dec 21, 2018
    The Agenda's Ontario Hubs field producer Jeyan Jeganathan talks to basic-income recipients in Thunder Bay about the looming end to the pilot program.
  • a woman by a fire
    Why the people of Grassy Narrows are still eating the fish
    Published On: Dec 17, 2018

    Research shows that fish in the area are contaminated with mercury, which can cause serious health problems in people who eat them — so why have they remained a staple of the local diet?

  • Alvin Fiddler, Ryan McMahon, Cynthia Blackstock
    What the death of Braiden Jacob means to Ontario’s First Nations communities
    Published On: Dec 11, 2018

    The 17-year-old was at least the 11th Indigenous youth from outside Thunder Bay to die in that city. We asked three First Nations activists and community leaders for their thoughts on this tragedy.

  • Name That Town: Kenora
    TVO Digital Media
    2:02 - Jan 31, 2019
    Find out about the novel - and controversial - way Kenora, Ont., decided to come up with its name.
  • Name That Town: Thunder Bay
    TVO Digital Media
    2:13 - Feb 13, 2019
    How Thunder Bay owes its name to a quirky referendum result.
  • a student chopping vegetables in a school kitchen
    How a Thunder Bay high school is changing lives through healthy food
    Published On: Oct 22, 2018

    At this all-Indigenous high school, chef Mandi O’Connor and her students are building community one meal at a time.

Ontario Hubs - Northeastern

  • a man holding a sword
    Lessons in love from Sudbury’s very own love doctor
    Published On: Feb 14, 2019

    This Valentine’s Day, TVO.org talks to Professor Jason Lepojärvi — better known as “Dr. Love” — about romance, friendship, and why it’s better to be in Finland on February 14.

  • a person standing on a snowy street
    How Saint-Firmin Monestime made history as Canada’s first Black mayor
    Published On: Feb 13, 2019

    Political strife in Haiti brought him to Canada. A chance encounter in a restaurant brought him to the northeastern town of Mattawa — and a life in politics.

  • a wide view of Sault Ste. Marie
    Sault Ste. Marie is short on workers — and thinks it may know where to find some
    Published On: Feb 06, 2019

    On the hunt for skilled employees, the city is making a pitch to thousands of workers in Oshawa who’ll soon be out of a job.

  • [INSERT ALT TEXT]
    How one small Ontario town is trying to persuade people to move up north
    Published On: Jan 10, 2019

    Want to buy your own piece of the province for $500? Maybe you should consider heading to Smooth Rock Falls.

  • white moose in Sweden
    Meet one of Ontario’s most elusive residents: The white moose
    Published On: Dec 04, 2018

    You’ve probably never seen one — few have. But experts say their numbers may be on the rise.

  • Hockey announcer Joe Bowen
    Holy Mackinaw: Leafs play-by-play legend Joe Bowen on his storied career
    Published On: Nov 19, 2018

    The Sudbury native was recently inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. He talks about the game, the calls, and his famous catchphrase

  • Name That Town: Cobalt
    TVO Digital Media
    2:21 - Feb 15, 2019
    How Cobalt, Ont., owes its name to a common metal that has become extremely valuable.
  • Canadian designer Bruce Mau
    Rebranding the north: Why Ontario cities are overhauling their image
    Published On: Nov 16, 2018

    Can new logos and slogans help northeastern communities boost their populations? Designer and Sudbury native Bruce Mau talks municipal makeovers and why the north needs to stop imitating the south.
     

  • a man crouching by a tombstone
    How one retired Ontario teacher is helping keep the memory of the World Wars alive
    Published On: Nov 08, 2018

    Inspired by his family’s service, John Hetherington leads battlefield tours of Europe to tell the stories of Canadians who fought and died.

Ontario Hubs - Southwestern

  • Cambridge Memorial Hospital in Ontario
    Why it’s so hard to deliver major infrastructure projects on time and on budget
    Published On: Feb 04, 2019

    Brian Kelcey, vice-president of public affairs for the Toronto Region Board of Trade, talks to TVO.org about why large infrastructure projects hit delays and cost overruns — and what we can do to get them back on track.

  • a service dog called Merel
    How Merel the dog helps young witnesses testify in court
    Published On: Jan 25, 2019

    When children make statements, testify, or deliver victim-impact statements at the London courthouse, Merel is there to lend a helping paw.

  • destruction after a tornado
    Meet Ontario’s tornado detectives
    Published On: Jan 14, 2019

    A new project led by researchers at Western University aims to collect data on every tornado in Ontario this year. We talk to Professor Gregory Kopp about his team’s unique New Year’s resolution — and about the risks and rewards of storm-tracking.

  • a man walking through a mosque
    Why hate crimes are on the rise across Ontario
    Published On: Jan 03, 2019

    New Statistics Canada numbers shows a substantial increase in reported hate crimes. We talk to UOIT professor Barbara Perry about right-wing populism, the reliability of data, and how police can do more.

  • a man in a field
    Meet the toxin that’s got Ontario corn farmers worried
    Published On: Dec 10, 2018

    Vomitoxin is exactly what it sounds like — and it’s turning up in corn throughout southwestern Ontario.

  • Building
    How new federal legislation could hurt law students — and the people who rely on their services
    Published On: Nov 26, 2018

    Bill C-75 could strip law students of opportunities to gain practical experience. It could also deny some Ontarians their best shot at legal representation.

  • What causes algae blooms?
    TVO Digital Media
    2:26 - Nov 12, 2018
    Ontarians are confronting a problem with blue-green algae in Lake Erie. Learn about the causes, and the role phosphorus plays in the problem.
  • a man holding up a letter
    Honouring the Japanese Canadians who worked Ontario farms during and after the Second World War
    Published On: Nov 08, 2018

    Thousands of Japanese Canadians were interned in B.C. and sent to do menial jobs in other provinces. Stony Nakano, now 97, looks back at his postwar life in Chatham-Kent.

  • Newspaper headline
    How Ontarians celebrated the end of the Great War in London, Paris, and (the city formerly known as) Berlin
    Published On: Nov 07, 2018

    Street parties broke out. Effigies of the kaiser were burned. But in Kitchener, the celebrations had a darker side.

Ontario Hubs - Indigenous

  • Edmund Metatawabin receiving the Order of Canada from Julie Payette
    What it means to be honoured by the country that wronged you
    Published On: Feb 15, 2019

    For his advocacy on behalf of residential-school survivors, Edmund Metatawabin was awarded the Order of Canada. He spoke with TVO about what the honour represents to him — and what the future holds for Indigenous communities.

  • gardening
    How Indigenous land-based learning can help fight climate change
    Published On: Feb 13, 2019

    Ontario university students are doing hands-on work in food and medicine gardens and in manomin fields — all part of a community-based research program aimed at cultivating healthy relationships and a healthy environment.

  • Melanie Goodchild
    What universities could learn from an Indigenous ‘way of knowing’
    Published On: Jan 30, 2019

    Melanie Goodchild’s research is informed by “Anishinaabe Gikendaasowin,” part of her First Nation’s knowledge system — she talks to TVO.org about complexity theory, two-eyed seeing, and fighting for change in academia.

  • construction on a straw house
    How straw homes could help solve the First Nations housing crisis
    Published On: Jan 08, 2019

    Indigenous communities across the province are dealing with inadequate housing. Farmers’ fields may hold the answer.

  • a woman by a fire
    Why the people of Grassy Narrows are still eating the fish
    Published On: Dec 17, 2018

    Research shows that fish in the area are contaminated with mercury, which can cause serious health problems in people who eat them — so why have they remained a staple of the local diet?

  • Alvin Fiddler, Ryan McMahon, Cynthia Blackstock
    What the death of Braiden Jacob means to Ontario’s First Nations communities
    Published On: Dec 11, 2018

    The 17-year-old was at least the 11th Indigenous youth from outside Thunder Bay to die in that city. We asked three First Nations activists and community leaders for their thoughts on this tragedy.

  • Chief Phyllis Williams
    First Nations say they paid a heavy price when the Tories scrapped renewable-energy projects
    Published On: Nov 20, 2018

    Indigenous communities across the province invested in hundreds of green-energy initiatives — and they say they’ve lost millions in potential revenues since the PCs took power.

  • boiling water on a stove
    Helping to solve the First Nations water crisis through collaboration
    Published On: Oct 24, 2018

    There are dozens of boil-water advisories on reserves across the country. Can one research team’s innovative approach help fix that?

  • a student chopping vegetables in a school kitchen
    How a Thunder Bay high school is changing lives through healthy food
    Published On: Oct 22, 2018

    At this all-Indigenous high school, chef Mandi O’Connor and her students are building community one meal at a time.

Ontario Hubs - Hubs Video

  • Ontario Hubs: Covering Indigenous Stories
    The Agenda with Steve Paikin
    5:51 - Feb 08, 2019
    Jeyan Jeganathan talks with Haley Lewis, the Ontario Hubs Indigenous reporter.
  • Battling Dementia with the Power of AI
    The Agenda with Steve Paikin
    6:01 - Feb 06, 2019
    Ontario Hubs field producer Jeyan Jeganathan reports on Winterlight Labs, a Toronto-based start-up trying to change the way medical professionals screen for dementia using AI.
  • Ontario Hubs: Community Radio Stations
    The Agenda with Steve Paikin
    10:21 - Feb 01, 2019
    The Agenda discusses the future of community radio in Ontario.
  • Ontario Hubs: National Service Dogs At Work
    The Agenda with Steve Paikin
    7:21 - Jan 25, 2019
    Ontario Hubs journalist Mary Baxter discusses her time spent observing Merel, a service dog who helps children testify in court procedures.
  • Mining in the Digital Age
    Ontario Hubs
    4:41 - Jan 11, 2019
    Ontario Hubs field producer Jeyan Jeganathan visits Goldcorp's Integrated Remote Operating Centre in Thunder Bay to learn how remote mining works.
  • Ontario Hubs: Repopulating the North
    The Agenda with Steve Paikin
    15:56 - Jan 11, 2019
    Ontario Hubs journalists discuss the ways in which northern communities are trying to grow their populations.
  • Ontario Hubs: 2019 Outlook
    The Agenda with Steve Paikin
    30:19 - Jan 04, 2019
    Ontario Hubs journalists discuss stories they'll be watching in their regions in 2019.
  • Basic Income Burden
    The Agenda with Steve Paikin
    7:26 - Dec 21, 2018
    The Agenda's Ontario Hubs field producer Jeyan Jeganathan talks to basic-income recipients in Thunder Bay about the looming end to the pilot program.
  • Ontario Hubs: Systemic Racism in Thunder Bay
    The Agenda with Steve Paikin
    11:21 - Dec 17, 2018
    Northwestern Ontario Hubs journalist Jon Thompson discusses the results of an inquiry into systemic racism at the hands of police in Thunder Bay.
Show Comments

TVO Quick Links

  • The Agenda with Steve Paikin
  • Steve Paikin's Blog
  • TVOkids.com
  • mPower
  • TVO Mathify
  • TVO ILC
  • TeachOntario
  • TVO's Public Archive

TVO Info

  • Where to Find TVO
  • Jobs at TVO
  • Journalistic Standards
  • Contact Us
  • FAQs
Here's how you can support TVO
Sign up for our email newsletters
Connect with TVO
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Copyright - TVO is a registered charity #85985 0232 RR0001 - Copyright © 2019 The Ontario Educational Communications Authority (TVO)